Hello my dear fellow Nexians!
I have been meaning to start growing Salvia Divinorum for a while, and finally the time has come to get my hands dirty.
In a good week I should receive two established plants (+- 30cm tall), which I will first give a few weeks to settle in and get used to the new conditions. After they have adapted and grown a bit taller I will take a few cuttings and attempt to get those growing as well.
Today I went out to a local garden center to purchase some materials in preparation:
- a few small pots (10cm diameter) for the cuttings
- a few bigger pots (30cm diameter) to repot the cuttings in after they have outgrown the smaller pots
- saucers for underneath the pots
- some bamboo sticks to support the stems once the plants have grown taller
- potting soil
- clay pellets to put in the bottom of the pots to ensure good drainage
- perlite to mix with the potting soil to ensure the mixture is nice and airy (I was recommended vermiculite, but didn't find any at this specific garden center. Perlite should also work fine I've read, and can also come in handy for mushroom projects)
I have no real experience potting and tending to plants, so I had a few questions about the soil and fertilizer:
- I have read that Salvia Divinorum prefers a slightly acidic soil and fertilizer. I have bought potting soil specifically for acid-loving plants, as this seemed preferable to regular potting soil. Can anyone verify that this would be a good soil for my plants?
Quote:
DCM Potting soil Heather , azalea, hydrangea & all acid-loving plants is an excellent, ready-to-use potting soil of professional quality ideal to pot and repot all sorts of acid-loving plants. This potting soil is made up of high quality types of peat and other extra nutrients:
Organic fertilizers that gradually provide nutrients for a calm growth and long blossoming during multiple months. These organic fertilizers are an energy source for numerous bacteria. A good bacterial activity is essential for the development of strong and healthy roots.
Naturally low PH
Modified mixture of types of peat: The modified acidity (pH) of this potting soil ensures that the plants can absorb nutrients optimally for a fresh green leaf color and a rich blossoming during multiple months.
BLACK PEAT
Iron
Plays an important role in the creation of chlorophyll and ensures a deep green leaf color.
For which plants?
All acid-loving plants and many plants of Japanese origin like Heather , azalea, Rhododendron, Skimmia , Blue Hydrangea, Pieris , Pernettya , Camelia, Calluna , Wintergreen , Kalmia , gorse , broom , Magnolia, Witch Hazel , Globe Thistle , Juneberry , Acer palmatum and japonicum.
- I have read that most people use "generic" (whatever that means) fertilizer for Salvia. I've also read that the fertilizer should be acidic or neutral, and that using basic fertilizer can well kill Salvia plants. Can someone with knowledge/experience tell me what I should be looking for when I'm buying fertilizer? I live in Europe and will likely not have any of the popular US brands available, so it would be nice to know more about what nutrients should (not) be in the fertilizer I should be using.
What are the dangers and symptoms of over -and underfeeding fertilizer?
The only thing I know is that yellowing of the leaves is supposedly a symptom of iron deficiency.
Here is my idea of proper plant care for S. Divinorum after a few days of gathering information:
- Allow plants to adjust to new environments, Salvia is sensitive to sudden variations in temperature/humidity, etc.
- Make sure the soil is slightly acidic and airy, well-draining (mixture of acidic potting soil and verm/perlite, clay pellets at the bottom of the pots)
- Suspend pots over bricks to ensure that the bottom drainage holes can also provide plenty oxygen
- Do not overwater, rather wait for soil to dry up inbetween waterings and possibly wait until leaves start to droop ever so slightly before watering again.
- Feed a little bit of fertilizer every third watering
- No long periods of direct sunlight (I am planning on putting my plants in a corner of my indoors verandah which is situated in the northwest of my house. That way it should get plenty indirect light from the windows, but not much direct sunlight)
Any tips and extra information is more than welcome, I am excited to get ready to propagate this plant
UPDATE: Added a picture of my plants on the day I received them. The leaves are drooping a bit, and a few leaves have tiny brown/black edges, but I think they look pretty great considering what they have been through. I have given them a little bit of water and am now letting it adjust to their new conditions:
"The only way to deal with an unfree world is to become so absolutely free that your very existence is an act of rebellion." - Albert Camus